SJSCA

La Revue suisse d'anthropologie sociale et culturelle est la revue de la Société suisse d'éthnologie (SEE). Elle publie des contributions, ethnographiquement et théoriquement ancrées, sur des questions d’actualités et des débats en anthropologie sociale et culturelle. En tant que revue trilingue, avec des articles en anglais, en allemand et en français, elle cherche à renforcer le dialogue entre les différents courants théoriques et les traditions académiques. Le large spectre thématique encourage les échanges au-delà des disciplines et entre les nombreux domaines de l’anthropologie sociale et culturelle.

SJSCA 31 / 2025

SJSCA

Reciprocal Vulnerability: Privilege, Violence, and Solidarity From Fieldwork to Academia

This issue of the Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology hosts a dossier that seeks to uncover the vulnerabilities encountered by researchers in anthropological fieldwork and academia, tracing their political and epistemological potential in the creation of ethnographic knowledge grounded in practices of reciprocity and solidarity. The contributions explore how anthropologists recover from various experiences of discomfort, harm, and violence by creating bonds of care and support with others, including interlocutors and fellow researchers. These relationships critically shape and reshape their perspectives and the knowledge they create. The guest editors introduce the concept of “reciprocal vulnerability”, recognizing that vulnerabilities are relational, shifting, and situational experiences and positionalities that can connect people across differences and inequalities, thereby enabling for new forms of exchange and reciprocity to emerge and thrive in fieldwork and anthropology more generally.

The dossier is followed by two special features. The first investigates how anthropologists engage in multimodal practices to convey research and negotiate power dynamics, advocating for a dynamic, performative approach to representing the “other” and rethinking scholarly practices. The second set of interventions initiates a conversation around the Ascona Charter, which spells out generic values and concrete commitments to inspire hope and collective deliberation and to catalyze transformative change within and outside the discipline of anthropology.

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